Abstract

Virtual addressing is available to a co-processor (20) to asynchronously control the movement of multiple page units of data between different locations in the same or a different media, e.g. main store (23, MS) and expanded store (24, ES), or both may be in ES (24), or both may be in MS (23). The co-processor (20) controls the asynchronous page movement in parallel with continuing execution of other instructions by the central processor (CP) which requested the page movement. Each page to be moved is specified by an MSB (Move Specification Block). A set of MSBs are addressed by a special type of channel control word (CCW) in a channel program containing one or more CCWs, some of which may address one or more sets of MSBs (one MSB set per CCW) to control the movement of any number of pages. The CPU executes a special ADM SSCH (start subchannel) instruction that passes the page move work to the co-processor (20) to perform the requested page transfer involving one or more sets of MSBs. Flag fields in source and sink specifications in each MSB contains a plurality of flag bits that define: the associated source or sink media, whether the specified address is to be translated as a virtual address or to be handled as an absolute address, whether replication of the source page(s) is to be done at the sink location, and whether the page(s) are to be erased by only accessing the sink pages to control the writing of a predetermined padding character, such as zero, through-out the content of the sink page(s).

Description

Introduction

The invention relates to providing a co-processor method and means for moving a plurality of pages simultaneously with the execution of instructions by the processor which requested the movement of the pages, which may be virtually addressed.

Background

US-A-4,476,524 uses real addressing of pages in main storage (MS) and in page store (PS) to asynchronously copy pages of data between MS and PS under control of a channel processor. A CP initiates the page transfer by executing a SIO (start input output) instruction which initiates a channel program comprised of channel control words (CCWs). US-A-4,476,524 cannot use virtual addresses to move pages, and virtual addressing cannot be asynchronously forced into its method of operation. The subject invention does not use any real address in channel program CCWs to address pages.

US-A-4,476,524 uses the real address within one of the two CCWs used per page to address the page. In US-A-4,476,524 the first of the two CCW is either a PPI (prepare page in) or a PPO (prepare page out), and the second CCW is a page copy CCW in a variable chain of CCWs initiated by a SIO instruction. The CP may execute other instructions at the same time that the channel program is controlling the PS/MS page transfer of a variable number of pages. US-A-4,476,524 does not disclose any move specification block (MSB), which is introduced by the subject invention for enabling virtual addressing in a CCW program.

EP-A 0 214 870 of Fujitsu describes and claims a synchronous page move instruction that operates on the central processor of a system. It is operand media dependent, i.e. it has an MS operand and an ES operand; while the subject invention is not media dependent among the media for which it is designed. This application does not disclose any MSB, introduced by the subject invention for enabling virtual addressing in a CCW program.

European patent application serial number EP 90 115 517.6 discloses a move page MVPG synchronous instruction which moves a single page and the central processor cannot execute any other instructions until the page move is completed. This application does not disclose any MSB, introduced by the subject invention for enabling virtual addressing in a CCW program and only moves a single page at a time.

Summary of the Invention

This invention provides a co-processor as an asynchronous interface between a processor requesting a service and the performance of that service by the co-processor.

This invention provides a co-processor as an interface between an application program (executing on any central processor in a multi-processor system) and the co-processor's performance of a service requested by the program.

This invention provides a co-processor to asynchronously control the movement of a set of pages concurrently with the continuation of execution by a central processor that requested the movement of the set of pages.

This invention provides a co-processor to asynchronously control the movement of a set of pages in the same medium or between different media concurrently with the continuation of execution by a processor that requested the movement of the set of pages.

This invention provides an asynchronous co-processor interface between a processor requesting a service and the performance of that service by the co-processor using predetermined virtual addresses.

This invention provides an asynchronous co-processor interface between a processor requesting a service and the performance of that service by the co-processor using predetermined virtual addresses in a unique data structure.

This invention provides an asynchronous co-processor interface between a processor requesting a service and the performance of that service by the co-processor using predetermined virtual addresses in a unique data structure accessed through an I/O channel program that uses real addressing.

This invention enables virtual addressing to be used by a co-processor to asynchronously control the movement of multiple page units of data between different locations which may be in ES and MS, or both may be in ES, or both may be in MS. A co-processor is used to control the asynchronous page movement in parallel with continuing execution by the central processor (CP) requesting the page movement, so that a single CP instruction can efficiently move a very large number of pages simultaneously with the execution of other instructions in the CP. Further, the page movement by the co-processor may be between different media in the same computer system.

The virtual or absolute addressing of the source and sink (destination) locations for each page to be moved is specified by an MSB (Move Specification Block). An embodiment of a co-processor, called an "Asynchronous Data Mover" (ADM), controls the movement of the pages by the MSBs. A set of MSBs are addressed by a special type of channel control word (CCW), and a channel program of one or more CCWs addresses one or more sets of MSBs (one set per CCW) to control the movement of any number of pages. The CCWs use real addressing (not virtual addressing) to address each set of MSBs. A Start Subcommand (SSCH) instruction to a special ADM Subchannel (SCH) is executed by a CP to initiate the ADM co-processor to start a page transfer controlled by one or more sets of MSBs. The SSCH instruction identifies the ADM subchannel and the ORB (Operation Request Block) pointing to the MSB CCW program (the location of the first CCW of that program). For example, the CP's general register (GR) 1 contains the ID of the subchannel involved while the address in the SSCH instruction (D2, B2) addresses the operation request block (ORB). The ORB contains the address of the channel program.

As in standard ESA/390 I/O operations, the SCH (subchannel) provides the logical link between the invoking program (the control program in this case) and particular asynchronous requests outstanding. Thus, where N special ADM SCHs have been allocated to communicate requests to the coprocessors, an operation completion interruption identifies which operation has completed by identifying the SCH used to initiate the operation as part of the information provided with the interruption. The control program keeps a record of which asynchronous operation has been assigned to each ADM SCH. Only one operation may be outstanding on a SCH at a time. The prior art does not teach the use of MSBs to perform virtual addressing of pages under control of the real addressing of the MSBs by a chain of CCWs initiated by a SSCH instruction to an ADM SCH.

The virtual addressing possible in the MSB instruction differs from the prior move page MVPG instruction in European patent application number EP 90 115 517.6. That application requires the page movement be synchronous with central processor (CP) operations, wherein the CP cannot execute other instructions while its requested page movement is being done. On the other hand, the MSB co-processor asynchronously controls the movement of any number of pages while the processor requesting the page movement is executing other instructions. Addressing of the pages may be virtual or absolute.

The flag fields in the source and sink specifications within the MSB contain a plurality of flag bits that define: the associated source or sink media, whether the specified addresses are to be translated as a virtual address or to be handled as absolute addresses, whether replication of the source page(s) is to be done at the sink location, and whether the sink page(s) is to be erased by writing therein a predetermined character, e.g. all-zero data.

When virtual addressing is specified in the flag field of an MSB, the source and/or sink portion of the MSB contains a segment table descriptor (STD) that specifies the virtual address space containing the associated source or sink page. An offset field in each MSB contains the virtual address in the specified address space, or contains the real address if a real address is flagged in the MSB. If real addressing is specified in the flag field of an MSB, the STD field is ignored.

Thus, an MSB is generally used to specify the source and sink locations for a page to be moved in the same specified internal medium (e.g. both source and sink are in MS or ES), or between different media (e.g. source in MS or ES, and the sink in the other medium).

Further, this invention provides an asynchronous coprocessor interface by which a processor may request that a group of page frames anywhere in an electronic storage hierarchy be set to zeros (cleared) while the requesting processor continues normal execution.

When a zeroing control bit (Z) is provided as a flag field in the source specification in an MSB, the move operation is changed to eliminate the accessing of the source page(s) and to only access the sink pages to control the writing of a predetermined padding character, such as zero, through-out the content of the sink page(s). The Z-bit for sink pages has no meaning.

Still further, this invention provides an asynchronous interface by which a processor may request that a particular page (or set of pages) be replicated in a group of page frames anywhere in an electronic storage hierarchy while the requesting processor continues normal execution. Replication at the sink location requires only a single fetch of specified source page(s), which are then copied any number of times at the sink location for replication. When the replication function (R) is specified, the source page(s) are replicated into each sink page(s). The Page Count in the MSB controls the number of source pages that are replicated. A Replication Count Field in the sink specification controls the number of such replications performed.

The virtual addressing in the MSB instruction differs from the prior move page MVPG instruction in European patent application number EP 90 115 517.6. That application synchronously controls the page movement with central processor (CP) operations wherein the CP cannot do any processing while its requested page movement is being done. On the other hand, the MSB co-processor asynchronously can control the movement of any number of virtually addressed pages while other processing is being done by the requesting CP. CP requests for asynchronous page transfers are made by any CP application program requesting the system control program to execute a start subchannel (SSCH) instruction (defined in the ESA/390 computer architecture described in the ESA/390 Principles of Operations having form number SA22-7201-00 for ordering the publication from the IBM Corporation.

Detailed Description of the Drawings

Fig. 1

is a general diagram of a computer electronic complex (CEC) containing asynchronous data mover (ADM) hardware represented as a co-processor in the CEC.

Fig. 2

represents the addressing structure for ADM invocation and execution within an ADM program using move specification blocks (MSBs).

Fig. 3

illustrates a preferred form of a move specification block (MSB).

Fig. 4A

is a flow diagram of the operation of the ADM Start Subchannel (SSCH) operation.

Fig. 4B

is an overall flow diagram of the ADM co-processor operation for processing a work element from the work queue.

Fig. 5

is a flow diagram of the operation of a CCWLOOP microcode routine used in the flow diagram in Fig. 4.

Fig. 6

is a flow diagram of the operation of a CCWEXE microcode routine used in the flow diagram in Fig. 5.

Fig. 7

is a flow diagram of the operation of a MOVE microcode routine used in the flow diagram in Fig. 6.

Fig. 8

is a flow diagram of the operation of a SENSE microcode routine used in the flow diagram in Fig. 6.

Fig. 9

is a flow diagram of the operation of a SENSE ID microcode routine used in the flow diagram in Fig. 6.

The systems control element (SCE) is a part of any conventional IBM ES/9000 system in the prior art for controlling storage accesses. The SCE provides a signalling mechanism for signalling all elements in the CEC. The SCE performs the following functions important to the preferred embodiment of this invention:

1. Storage accesses (fetch and store) to main storage (MS) on word boundaries.

2. Storage accesses (fetch and store) to expanded store (ES) on a page boundary transferring one page of data per access.

3. Page transfer control from MS to either MS or ES outside of any CP cache, and from ES to either MS or ES outside of any CP cache. (Each CP may have one or more private caches and a shared cache with other CP's.)

4. Page zeroing in either MS or ES without transferring a data page of zero characters from another page in storage or affecting any CP cache under control of a Z bit in a storage request.

5. Signalling mechanism to enable any element to signal any other element in the CEC via SCE busses.

Each CP in the CEC executes application programs and the system control program that manages the hardware and software resources in the CEC system. The instructions which comprise any program for any CP is loaded into the CP caches from MS, as well as any data the program requires. The CPs operate in a typical multi-processing manner with data coherence controlled by the SCE.

Application and subsystem programs use ES for temporary storage of large amounts of needed data, which must be moved to MS before it can be used by a program. The system control program also uses ES as a paging store, and thus moves pages of data/programs between ES and MS to free-up MS for allocation to other programs and their data. Programs generally use ES for one of two uses: as a cache of data under program control, or as an intermediate work file. Because of the wide disparity in the access time of obtaining a page from ES and the time to access a page from a DASD device on a conventional channel, the ES can be used as an effective storage media where any data to be accessed cannot fit into the MS allotted for the particular data object or purpose. Where a temporary work file in a programming process exceeds the size that can be allocated for it in MS, but will fit in the normally much larger ES, the use of ES as a storage device will substantially decrease the execution time of the process. Where the data transfer occurs asynchronously to the CPs of a CEC instead of synchronously (as in the use of a Move Page (MVPG) instruction) the reduction of execution time will be accomplished with significantly reduced processor time. In the MVPG scenario, the processor must wait while each page of data is moved, but in the ADM asynchronous scenario, a processor executes other instructions simultaneously with the data moves because those moves are under control of the coprocessor.

Application programs often copy large numbers of pages of data from one MS buffer to another MS buffer when different components of a program have to process the same data, but must keep separate copies of the data for integrity, security or algorithmic reasons. Thus, an application, a programming subsystem or a control program can move pages of data within MS, within ES, or between ES and MS by using an ADM facility in the CEC without incurring a large CP time overhead.

To process instructions and data, and to communicate with the rest of the system, the CPs send storage commands, which are comprised of data and signals on busses to the SCE which connect the CPs to the SCE. Data and instructions are fetched from MS by any processor sending a storage fetch command to the SCE. Similarly, data is stored into MS by sending a storage store command to the SCE with the data. Signalling between elements in the CEC is accomplished by a processor sending a signal command to the SCE with the ID of the receiving element, and SCE signalling control logic forwards the signal to the correct receiving element.

In Fig. 1, mainstorage (MS) 23 is the repository of data and programs that the system can execute. Data lines are accessed in MS by the CPs via the SCE function. A CP can access any byte, word, or set of words in an accessed data line. Multiple CPs can concurrently fetch or store allocated areas in MS with their accesses managed by SCE coherency controls described in the prior art.

A hardware storage area (HWA) 26 is physically part of MS 23, but the HWA 26 can only be accessed by microcode or under hardware control (it cannot be accessed, or addressed, by application or control programs executing on any CP.) The HWA 26 contains system configuration control blocks, work queues, interruption queues (IRPT queue), subchannel control blocks, and other communication areas for the CPs, channels, and ADM functions.

The expanded storage (ES) 24 stores page units of data which can be accessed only as page units. ES 24 can store many times more data than MS 23, and is the repository of data not immediately needed in MS 23 for execution by a CP, such as for backing buffers, paging storage, and temporary data storage. The SCE contains the controllers for both MS 23 and ES 24. The SCE also contains the MS and ES busses and logic used to control the movement of data between the SCE and either MS 23 or ES 24, and the movement of data for pages between MS 23 and ES 24. Although other page sizes are possible, in the preferred embodiment the page units are 4 KiloBytes (KB). The SCE busses to MS 23 and ES 24 are conceptually wide enough to handle all bits in a page in parallel, however current MS 23 and ES 24 busses are smaller than a page of bits because of hardware and cost constraints. In current implementations a line size is selected as the width of a single transfer to or from storage, based on a cost performance evaluation. An integral number of lines form a single page. The line size selected for ES transfers may be different than that selected for MS transfers but generally it is preferable that the ES line size be a multiple of the MS line size, e.g., twice the size, or four times the size, if they are different. Regardless of the implementation, programs may only specify full page transfers to or from ES 24, while MS 23 may be addressed at the byte-level in appropriate instructions. The SCE and the MS and ES controllers make MS 23 and ES 24 available for access by CPs, Coprocessors, I/O processors, and I/O Channels.

The I/O channel subsystem 22 provides the input/output functions of the system, by executing channel programs (which are sets of CCWs in MS 23) that control the transfer of data between MS 23 and I/O control units and devices.

ADM CCW List - Fig. 2:

Fig. 2 illustrates how lists of MSBs are accessed through the execution of an ADM SSCH instruction. The ADM SSCH instruction indirectly invokes the ADM co-processor 20 to perform a page move operation by passing the ADM CCW List 31 and the addressed MSBs to the ADM 20 for asynchronous execution. This instruction is restricted to privileged programs, e.g. control programs. Fig. 3 illustrates the preferred embodiment form of the unique ADM MSBs.

In Fig. 2, a ADM CCW list 31, and one or more associated MSB lists 32 are stored in MS 23 prior to executing the ADM SSCH instruction which will require them for its correct execution. This storing is done at the request of the program requesting the ADM SSCH instruction as the ADM co-processor 20 will eventually require these lists to perform the desired page move operations.

Each MSB list 32 may contain any number of MSBs, e.g. MSB 1 through MSB e, any MSB list 32 may contain as little as one MSB. The MSBs in a single list 32 are contiguously located in MS 23. But the different MSB lists 32 are located in non-contiguous MS locations addressed by the respective ADM CCWs in list 31. The MSB list 32 specifies all of the page moves controlled by one ADM CCW (which points to the respective MSB list 32). The CCW program may include more than one ADM MOVE CCW and thus more than one MSB list 32.

Each MSB in any MSB list 32 controls the copying of one or more pages from a source location (defined by a source specification) to a sink location (defined by a sink specification). Either source or sink location may be in ES 23 or MS 24, or both may be in MS 23 or in ES 24. The locations may be specified as absolute addresses or as virtual addresses.

MSB Structure - Fig. 3:

Fig. 3 illustrates the preferred form of the MSB, which has two parts that respectively specify addresses for source and sink locations for the page transfers represented by the respective MSB specification.

The source part of the specification is shown in words 0-1 and words 2-3. And the sink part of the specification is shown in words 4-5 and words 6-7.

The meanings of the various fields used in both the source specification and the sink specification of an MSB are as follows:
The page count (CNT) field contains the number of contiguous pages in the set of pages specified to be moved by this MSB. For a page move operation, this field applies to both the source and sink specifications. However, for a replication, the page count is the number of pages addressed by the source specification that will form the unit of replication. The number of such replications that are to be done is specified in the replication count field in the sink specification. Thus, the total number of sink pages that will be overwritten is the product of the page count and the replication count. For example, if a single page is to be replicated fifty times, the page count field will have a value of one, while the replication count value will be fifty. On the other hand, if a data structure of eight pages is to be replicated ten times, the page count field will contain eight and the replication count 10. In this case, 30 pages at the sink location will be overwritten. In the case where the source flags Z flag is 1, the source count field specifies the number of contiguous pages at the sink location in which zero bits are written in all bytes of the sink pages.

Where virtual addressing is specified for an operand in the flag field, the STD field contains the segment table descriptor to be used for translating the virtual address of each page in this specification. The STD is defined in the ESA/390 Principles of Operation as containing a segment table origin (STO) and a segment table length (STL). The STO is the real address of the segment table which defines the address space used in the address translation of the virtual page addresses.

The offset field contains the address of the first page in the set of pages to be moved by this specification in the MSB. The offset field has its meaning determined by the settings of the V, M and/or E flag bits, as follows:

If V=1, the offset field has a virtual address within the virtual space defined by the STD in the STD field. M and E bits are ignored in this case. The media and the address within the media are specified in the Page Table Entry as defined in European patent application number EP 90 115 517.6.

If V=0 and M=1, the offset field has an absolute MS address.

If V=0 and E=1, the offset field has an ES block number, which is the real address.

The flag field contains the following flag bits: C, Z, V, M, E and R. Each flag bit has a separate flag function with the following meaning:
C is a last MSB field. If C=0, this MSB is the last MSB in the set for the current CCW. If C=1, this MSB is not the last MSB in the set for the current CCW, and the next follows in the next contiguous bytes in MS following this one. C is only specified within the source flag specification and is ignored in the sink flag specification.

Z is a zeroing control flag bit. If Z=1, any source page(s) specified by this MSB are ignored (they are not copied), and zero bits are written into the specified sink pages. Z is only specified within the source flag specification and is ignored in the sink flag.

V is a virtual flag bit. If V=1, flag bits M and E are ignored, and the offset field contains the virtual address for the page(s) accessed by this MSB within the space defined by the STD field. If V=0, flag bit M or E is tested and if one, the offset field contains the absolute MS or real ES address for the page(s) represented by this MSB specification.

M is an MS absolute address flag. If M=1, the associated offset field contains an MS absolute address. If M=0, the associated offset field does not contain an MS address.

E is a ES real address flag. If E=1, the associated offset field contains an ESBN (ES block number), which is an ES absolute address. If E=0, the associated offset field does not contain an ES address.

R is a replication flag in the MSB source flags. It specifies that the contents of one or more contiguous pages at the source location are to be replicated in the sink locations. If R=1, the page count represents the extent in pages of the source operand that will repeatedly be copied to the sink location. The replication count specifies the number of times the source replication page set will be copied into the sink locations. The number of sink pages overwritten is the product of the page count and the replication count. The source and sink location media are determined by the settings of the V, M and E flags. The R flag is not defined for the sink operand flags.

ADM Start Subchannel (SSCH) Instruction Execution - Fig. 4A:

The execution of a SSCH to an ADM SCH has two parts: synchronous and asynchronous. In this embodiment, the CP SSCH microcode program recognizes that an ADM subchannel has been addressed by GR1. This requires that the request be placed on the ADM work queue and the ADM signalled that a work request has been queued for it. That completes the synchronous part of the SSCH instruction and the CP proceeds to the execution of the next instruction following the SSCH. The ADM Co-processor 20 will complete the asynchronous portion of the ADM SSCH operation by moving the specified pages asynchronously, while the requesting CP continues processing other instructions.

In Step 41A, the CP microcode tests operands for exception conditions such as invalid subchannel or addressing exceptions and, if none exist, continue to 41B. Otherwise, go to Step 42A to present program exception.

In Step 41C, if the subchannel is already status pending, then go to 42B to set condition code = 1, indicating status pending, and end the operation. Otherwise, continue to Step 41D.

In Step 41D, if a Start, Halt or Clear is already in progress at the subchannel, then go to Step 42C to set the condition code = 2, indicating busy, and end the operation. Otherwise, continue to Step 41E.

In Step 41E, if the subchannel is not perational, go to Step 42D to set the condition code to 3, indicating invalid subchannel, and end operation.

In Step 41F, copy the contents of the ORB to the work queue element.

In Step 41G, test whether the addressed SCH is of the ADM type. If yes, go on to Step 41J. If not, go to pre-existing processing for other SCH types.

In Step 41H, place a work queue element on the bottom of the ADM work queue. This work queue element points to the designated subchannel.

In Step 41J, the CPU signals the ADM co-processor via the SCE that a work element has been placed on the ADM work queue (ADM WQ).

In Step 41K, the synchronous CPU portion of SSCH is complete and the SSCH instruction completes with condition code = 0.

The CPU continues on to execution of the next sequential instruction.

ADM Work Queue:

The information put into each element in the ADM WQ by an ADM SSCH instruction is obtained as follows: The ID of the issuing subchannel is provided by the SSCH instruction in a CP general register, and the subchannel ID is put into the WQ element. The ORB contents are copied into the ADM WQ element. This information includes the first CCW address. The ORB (operation request block) is addressed by an operand of the executed ADM SSCH instruction.

The ADM co-processor 20 accesses work elements in the WQ in FIFO order, removes the top one, and performs the page move operation represented by that element. Eventually each work element progresses from the bottom to the top of the WQ. The ADM co-processor 20 will be in a busy state as long as it is executing elements on the WQ. Thus, newly requested work is put on the bottom of the WQ when the ADM co-processor 20 is busy handling a prior work request from the WQ.

The ADM co-processor 20 executes the ADM CCW list 31 in Fig. 2, addressed by the first CCW address provided in the respective WQ element. These CCWs are contiguous in MS 23 except when a TIC CCW is executed which locates the next ADM CCW in the list 31 at a non-contiguous location in MS 23. The first CCW in ADW CCW list 31 is generally an MSB one which addresses the first MSB in the MSB list 32 previously stored in MS 23.

Each element in the ADM WQ is eventually executed by the ADM micro-code program, using its execution unit hardware, as the ADM executes each next element of work on the WQ in sequence.

Interruption Queue:

Whenever the ADM completes all work for a WQ element, the ADM micro-code program causes an element to be added to the bottom of the CEC I/O interruption queue (IQ) and to signal all CPs that a completion report has been added to the IQ. Eventually, one of the CP's will accept the interruption and relay it to the control program in the manner predefined in ESA/390 Architecture. The predefined conditions of ESA/390 Architecture control the acceptance of an interruption by a particular CP, namely, the control program has enabled it for I/O interruptions and has masked the CP to receive an interruption of the subclass defined in the specific SCH by means of which the ADM operation was passed to the ADM COP, and through which it is reporting completion.

The first CP in the CEC to be enabled for I/O interruptions by the system control program will remove the top element in the IQ, examine the element, and generate an interruption code which is put into a predefined area in MS 23, the prefix save area (PSA), of the CP chosen by the control program to handle that element. That CP loads the I/O interruption PSW in that CP to redirect the execution to the control program which then tests the interruption subchannel status to determine that the page move is completed successfully so the pages of data moved by it can be used. (The ID of the issuing subchannel in each IQ element identifies the requesting program in control program tables to correlate it with the indicated page move completion.)

ADM Control Process - FIGURE 4B:

The Steps in the preferred embodiment for executing the overall ADM control process are shown in the flow-diagram of Fig. 4B, which perform the process previously described with respect to Figs. 1, 2 and 3. This process executes each MSB according to the specification contained therein as defined above.

Step 46A occurs when the ADM receives the CP signal from Fig. 4A Step 41J as a result of a SSCH instruction. This signal from the CPU via the SCE to the ADM co-processor 20 removes the ADM processor 20A from the wait state, if it is not working on a previous request and begins program execution at Step 46B in Fig. 4B. In Step 46A the work element defines the page move work requested by this ADM SSCH. At Step 41J, Fig. 4A, the CPU used a SIGW signal to signal the SCE to send a signal to the ADM facility to indicate to it that the CPU has put an element on the ADM work queue in the HWA storage area 26.

The ADM operates independently of the CPU. The ADM obtains and executes the element at the top of the queue because it is the oldest element in the work queue. Thus the ADM may be busy executing another element from the work queue when a new element is put onto the queue. In this case, the SIGW signal from the CPU can be ignored since the WQ is examined for more work at the end of processing of each element from the queue. Or, the queue may be empty, and the ADM may be idle (indicated by it being in a wait state) when it is signalled that a new element is being put on its work queue, and then the ADM can immediately access the new element and start executing it.

The ADM enters Step 46B whenever the ADM is available for performing a next work element on the ADM WQ and the queue contains an element to process. In Step 46B, the ADM removes the top element from the ADM queue, and in Step 46C the ADM calls its "CCWLOOP" micro-program routine to begin processing the removed element. A content of the removed element points to the first CCW in a required ADM CCW program (located in MS) that addresses a set of MSBs that specify the requested page moves.

Upon successful completion of the CCWLOOP routine, it returns control back to the ADM control routine which then executes Step 46D. Step 46D sets the completion status condition for the subchannel.

Then in Step 46E the ADM signals a pending interruption state for the associated ADM SSCH to indicate that its work has been completed on the operation requested on that subchannel. A signal is sent to all CPU's in the CEC using the I/O interruption facilities in the system to indicate that the work has been completed and the status of the completion. The first CPU to take that interruption will clear the interruption from the view of all CPUs in the system. The CPU taking the interruption will resume the execution of the control program at the instruction addressed by the I/O interruption PSW.

As soon as the ADM facility signals the CPs through the SCE indicating the subchannel's interruption pending state, the ADM facility checks the ADM work queue to look for more work requests. The ADM work queue will either be empty, or not empty with one or more work indicating elements. Step 46F tests the empty state of the queue. If it is empty, Step 46G is entered to put the ADM facility into a "wait" state, in which case a non-dedicated co-processor will do non-ADM work, if available. But if the ADM facility is on a dedicated co-processor, it will wait until it is signalled that the queue has received a work element.

However, if the MSB work queue is not empty, the process branches back to Step 46B to remove the next element on the queue, which is now at the top of the queue, and the process continues in the manner previously described.

MSB CCWLOOP Process - Fig. 5:

Fig. 5 represents the CCWLOOP process, which is an expansion of Step 43 in the MSB control process in Fig. 4B. CCWLOOP accesses and controls the execution of each CCW in the ADM CCW list 31.

The absolute MS address of the first CCW in the ADM CCW list 31 was found in the ORB (operation request block). The ORB was initialized by the operating system prior to the current ADM SSCH instruction being executed.

Initially, Step 51 loads this CCW address from the ADM WQ element (where it had been copied from the ORB) into an assigned local GPR (called CCW.ADDR.REG) in the MSB facility.

Then Step 52 fetches the next CCW to be executed in the CCW list using the CCW.ADDR.REG and places it into another local GPR (called CCW.REG) in the MSB facility from which it is executed. Initially, the CCW.REG receives the ADM CCW addressed by the CCW.ADDR.REG as the first CCW in the ADM CCW list 31. On each following iteration of this program loop, the next CCW in the CCW list 31 is loaded into CCW.REG by Step 52. CCW.ADDR.REG is incremented after each CCW is accessed so as to proceed through the list.

Next Step 53 calls an CCWEXE microcode routine to interpret and execute the current CCW in the CCW.REG.

Then Step 54 checks the return code (RC) from the execution of the CCWEXE routine during Step 53. If the return code indicates that the CCWEXE routine failed (by indicating an error or exception condition), the no exit is taken from Step 54 to Step 57 which ends the CCWLOOP execution and passes back an exception return code to Step 44 in the ADM control micro-program, in which its next Step 45 signals the error condition to the CPU's of the system via a CPU interruption signal for handling by the first CPU eligible to handle the interruption.

Step 55 checks the Chain Command flag in the current CCW to determine if the next CCW should be fetched and executed. If the Chain Command flag is off, then the currently executed CCW is the last CCW in the current CCW list 31, which now has its execution completed, and the no exit is taken from Step 55 to Step 57 with a return code (RC) indicating the current CCW list executed correctly being provided to the ADM control micro-program.

But if Step 55 finds the Chain Command flag on, the current CCW is not the last, and the yes exit is taken to Step 56 which increments the current CCW address (by incrementing the content of the CCW.Addr.Reg) to address the next CCW in the CCW list 31, and the process goes to Step 52 to repeat the execution of the CCWEXE routine process for the next CCW, and so on until the end of the current ADM operation request.

MSB CCWEXE Process - Fig. 6:

Fig. 6 represents the CCWEXE process, which is an expansion of Step 53 in the CCWLOOP control process in Fig. 5. CCWEXE executes the current CCW provided by the CCWLOOP routine. CCWEXE interprets the operation code in the current CCW and calls an appropriate sub-routine when required to complete the execution of the CCW.

Any one of several operation codes may exist in the current CCW, including the MOVE, NOOP, SENSE, SENSEID or TIC return code. All of these operation code types may exist in a plurality of CCWs in a single ADM CCW list for moving any number of pages. The CCWEXE routine tests the current CCW operation code for each of these five different types of CCW operation codes. If a match occurs, a yes exit is taken from the test Step to call a corresponding routine. When the corresponding routine completes, it provides a return code which is passed back to Step 54 in the CCWLOOP routine. If no match is obtained by the comparison, the no exit is taken to the next operation code comparison Step in the CCWEXE routine.

If no match is found by any of the comparisons provided in the CCWEXE routine, then the current CCW does not have any of the operation codes required in an ADM CCW list 31, and an exception return code is returned by Step 66 to the CCWLOOP Step 54. Then execution of the ADM CCW list 31 ends, and an abnormal end interruption status pending is signalled through the SCE to the CPs for communication to the first CP eligible to take the interruption, which in turn will interrupt the control program so it may handle the interruption.

Accordingly, the first Step 61 in the CCWEXE routine tests for the MOVE operation code. If it is found, Step 61A calls the MOVE micro-program in Fig. 7 to perform the move specified by the MSBs addressed by the current CCW. If no MOVE operation code is found by Step 61, its no exit is taken to Step 62 which tests if the NOOP (no-operation code) exists in the current CCW. If a NOOP condition is found, the yes exit is taken to Step 62A which returns a zero RC to Step 54. If there is no NOOP code, the no exit is taken to Step 63 to determine if there is a SENSE operation code in the current CCW.

If a SENSE opcode exists, the yes exit to Step 63A is taken which calls a SENSE CCW execution micro-program, from which Step 63B provides a return code to Step 54. The yes exit is taken to Step 64A which calls a micro-program routine that executes the SENSE CCW, and Step 63B provides the return code. The SENSE CCW returns error information that indicates the execution status of the MSB micro-program's immediately preceding operation.

If no SENSE opcode is detected by Step 63, Step 64 is entered to test for another type of sense command which is for the SENSEID operation code. The SENSEID CCW execution returns an identifier indicating the co-processor-type executing the CCW, such as indicating if it is a co-processor type dedicated to the move-page function. If the CCW tests not to be a SENSEID CCW, the no exit is taken to Step 65.

Step 65 tests the CCW opcode to determine if the current CCW command is a TIC (transfer-in-channel), which is a branching CCW. If it is a TIC CCW, the yes exit is taken to Step 67 that takes the branch address from the current CCW and loads it into the local GPR (CCW.ADDR.REG) in the ADM co-processor. Then Step 68 fetches the CCW at the branch address in CCW.ADDR.REG and loads it into the CCW.REG local register, from which the CCWs are executed.

If Step 65 does not find the TIC CCW, it takes its no exit to Step 66 that returns an invalid return code to Step 54 in the CCWLOOP micro-program in Fig. 5 to indicate that an invalid command exception condition should be provided to the program requesting the current page move operation.

MSB Move Micro-Program Process - Fig. 7:

The move micro-program performs the move operations specified by the list of Move Specification Blocks (MSBs) accessed by the current MOVE CCW. Since there may be plural CCWs in a single SSCH requested move operation, the current MOVE CCW may be one of many in the SSCH operation being currently executed. The MSBs in a list addressed by a CCW are located contiguously in MS storage, and the last MSB in the list is indicated by its last MSB bit being set off - the other MSBs in the list have their last MSB bits set on. The data address field of each MOVE CCW contains the MS address of the associated list of MSBs. A single entry into the MOVE microprogram results in the execution of all MSB's in the single list addressed by one MOVE CCW.

The current CCW is in the local GPR designated CCW.REG, and this MOVE CCW contains an address in its data address field which addresses the first MSB of a list of MSBs. Step 7A copies the MS address from the current CCW in the local CCW.REG into another local GPR called the MSB.ADDR.REG register.

Step 7B1 uses the MSB address in the MSB.ADDR.REG register to fetch the MSB from main storage 23 into the local storage 20B of the MSB co-processor.

Step 7B2 initializes the replication count in a REPL.COUNT local register in processor 20B to zero for later testing.

Step 7B3 tests the MSB source flags R field to find out whether replication has been requested. If replication is not specified, control passes to Step 7E1.

Step 7B4 is executed if replication is requested. In this step a test is made as to whether a single source page is to be replicated, in which case a transfer is made to Step 7D1. This test is made because the hardware execution unit only replicates a single source page. When more than one source page is to be replicated in the sink location, the execution unit will be invoked once for each multiple-source-page replication by the Move routine.

Step 7B5 prepares for multiple execution unit invocation by saving the page count (length of replication page set), source address (beginning of each replication page set), and the replication count into local registers. These are obtained from the local storage MSB copy.

Step 7B6 sets the source operand replication flag in the local MSB copy to zero since the execution unit does not perform multiple source-page replications.

Step 7B7 subtracts one from Replication Count and goes to Step 7E1.

Steps 7C1, 7C2 and 7C3 are only executed before a second and subsequent invocations of the execution unit to perform multiple page replications. Step 7C1 sets the execution unit source offset register from the local register saving it to reset it back to the beginning of the replication page set. Step 7C2 sets the execution unit page count from the local page count register to perform one multi-page replication.

Step 7C3 subtracts one from the replication count in the local register holding it (saved in Step 7B5) to prepare for a later completion test. Control is transferred to step 7F1 for the next execution unit invocation.

Step 7D1 moves the replication count to the page count field of the local copy of the MSB. This is for the single page replication case, which the execution unit will execute completely by replicating the single source page the number of times specified in its Page Count Register, loaded from the page count field of the local MSB.

Step 7E1 sets the required execution unit registers from the local copy of the MSB for the first invocation of the unit for processing the MSB.

Step 7F1 signals the MSB execution unit to perform the page moves specified in its internal registers (set in Steps 7E1 and partially in Steps 7C1 and 7C2).

Steps 7F2 and 7F3 are repetitively executed until the execution unit has completed its specified page move operation. Step 7F2 tests whether a Halt or Clear function has been requested from the host CPU, in which case the execution unit Halt/Clear register is then set to one to stop the ongoing operation. Step 7F3 checks for a completion signal and transfers back to Step 7F2 until it is received.

Step 7F4 tests the replication count in the local register to see if a multi-page replication is still to be completed. If so, control is transferred to Step 7C1 to prepare for the next multi-page replication invocation of the MSB execution unit.

At Step 7F5, processing of a single MSB is complete. The last MSB flag is tested. If this is the last MSB in the list, control is returned to Step 54 of CCWLOOP in Fig. 5. If there is another MSB, increment MSB.ADDR.REG to address the next MSB and transfer control to Step 7B1 to process it.

ADM Sense Micro-Program Process - Fig. 8:

The SENSE CCW execution in the ADM facility is represented in Fig. 8. The SENSE CCW for the ADM operates very similarly to the I/O SENSE CCW defined in the IBM ESA/390 Principles of Operation and in prior IBM S/370 Principles of Operation. It provides error information related to the last CCW and of the current ADM execution saved in assigned local registers in the ADM facility, including a CCW.ADDR.REG, MSB.ADDR.REG, PAGE.CNT.REG, SOURCE.OFFSET.REG, SINK.OFFSET.REG, SOURCE.STD.REG and SINK.STD.REG.

Step 81 provides this information from these ADM registers to the MS address specified in the SENSE. Then, Step 82 is entered to return to CCWLOOP process with a return code to prior Step 54 in FIGURE 5 to continue on with execution of the CCW list.

ADM SENSEID Micro-Program Process - Fig. 9:

The SENSEID CCW execution in the ADM facility is represented in Fig. 9. The SENSEID CCW for the ADM operates very similarly to the I/O SENSEID CCW defined in the IBM ESA/390 Principles of Operation and in prior IBM S/370 Principles of Operation. It provides identification information related to the ADM co-processor 20 type, such as its model number. Step 91 reads this information from corresponding ADM registers. After this information is stored at the CCW data address, Step 92 is entered to return the ADM process with a return code to prior Step 54 in FIGURE 5 to continue on to execution of the CCW list.

Dedicated Asynchronous Data Mover Co-Processor 20 Means:

The ADM control processes may be performed in any of a number of ways, depending on the system implementation. For example, the ADM may be implemented by sharing the functions of an I/O co-processor, or the ADM may use a processor dedicated to its functions. The choice of a particular form of ADM facility implementation is dependent on the anticipated ADM workload, compared to other workloads in the system in planning for a maximization of the efficiency of system performance.

In Fig. 1, the dedicated ADM co-processor 20 includes means for receiving a signal from any CPU via the SCE, and means for sending a signal to any CPU via the SCE. Such a signal requests an interruption of current processing in the receiving processor.

The ADM co-processor memory 20B is the random access type, byte addressable, accessed via co-processor command and data (CMD & Data) busses. The ADM co-processor 20 can fetch and store data, control code and commands in its local memory; the ADM co-processor 20 can fetch and store data, control code and commands in main storage (MS) 23 and data in expanded storage (ES) 24; and the ADM co-processor 20 can fetch and store data, control code, and queue information from the HWA (26).

The MSB execution unit 20C is a hardware state machine that operates in the ADM co-processor 20 to execute the page moves of one MSB (message specification block) per invocation. MSB execution unit 20C performs each co-processor storage command to the SCE ES/MS busing logic hardware 21A to accomplish the page moves specified in a current MSB being executed and to fetch tables used for dynamic address translation of source and sink virtual addresses.

The preferred embodiment of the asynchronous data mover (ADM) includes the coprocessor hardware shown in Fig. 10. ADM is a general purpose processor which may include general purpose registers (GPRs), and it uses the micro-code in a ROS or RAM (read-only store or read-only memory) shown internal to the ADM co-processor 20 for controlling the execution of its instructions. This micro-code for controlling the execution in this co-processor has been described with the flow-diagrams in Figs. 4 through 9. This processor 20A invokes the MSB execution unit 20C to do the actual moving of the pages. MSB execution unit 20C executes using the execution unit controls 133 in FIGURE 10. Dynamic Address Translation processing steps 104 and 109 are shown in detail in FIGURES 11A and 11B. DAT processing is part of the move process of execution unit 20C.

Description Of MSB Execution Unit Hardware In Fig. 10:

An ADM adapter 20D provides the storage access functions between the ADM 20 and the SCE 21 in Fig. 1. The SCE 21 is used by the processor 20A and the MSB execution unit 20C to fetch and store pages of data from and to the main storage 23 and the expanded storage 24 in the system. The SCE's 21 page-move function is used by the MSB execution unit 20C to move a page from one location in MS 23 or ES 24 to another location in MS 23 or ES 24. The page move is performed by the SCE 21 internally, using the MS/ES bussing logic 21A in response to page address and control information supplied by the MSB execution unit 20c through the ADM adapter 20D.

During the execution of an MSB in the MSB execution unit 20C, an SCE command (a page move command) is constructed in storage register 131, and this command is forwarded on the ADM bus 100 to the ADM adapter 20D which then places the command on the SCE bus for the SCE to execute.

The SCE storage command has the following fields in storage register 131:

Source absolute address;
Source protection key;
Source memory type (which is either MS, ES, or "zeros" if the Z bit is on in the MSB);
Sink absolute address;
Sink protection key; and
Sink memory type (which is either MS or ES).

The ADM processor 20A sequences through the cycles of operation, described below. The processor receives flags and addresses read from the corresponding fields in the MSB in MS 23 being currently addressed by an MSB CCW to load registers 101-103, 106-108, 111, 121 and 128. Registers 101-103 input to logic circuits 104 which performs a conventional DAT (dynamic address translation) operation to generate a source absolute (real) address in register 123 and determine from the source flag field the type of medium containing the source page, the type which is put into register 122. Registers 106-108 output to DAT logic circuits 109 which performs a conventional DAT (dynamic address translation) operation to generate a sink absolute (real) address in register 126 and determine from flag field states the type of medium containing the sink location the type which is placed in register 127.

The first iteration of the DAT controls 104 uses the STD IN register 103 if a virtual address is indicated by the flag fields in register 101. The STD is not accessed if a source real address is indicated by the flag bits. The address in the source offset register 102 is then used as a virtual or real address for providing the output of DAT controls to the source absolute (real) address register 123 and the source memory type to register 122, which provides the first source address to storage register 131.

The same process is used for the contents of registers 106-108 operating with the sink DAT 109 to generate the first sink address outputted into register 126, then to storage register 131. Then, the content of storage register 131 contains the first source and sink page addresses, the source and sink keys, and the source and sink memory types (given that in some cases a Z-bit in the memory type field may indicate no valid source address). If the source flag in storage register 131 indicates page zeroing, then the SCE page-move function supplies the source page of zeros internally. The content is provided to the SCE as part of the page-move storage command. The embodiment allows generation of the components of the resulting SCE page-move command to be generated in parallel (simultaneously). That is, the source and sink operand specifications may be generated to storage register 131 by different hardware concurrently, as indicated by the structure depicted in Fig. 10.

The page CNT field in register 111 is decremented by one via decrementer 112, and if the page count is not zero another set of page address generation cycles are performed, at least for the sink pages. No further address generation is performed for the source pages if R=1 or Z=1 in flag register 101.

In this manner each next sink and any source address is generated until the page count in register 111 reaches zero.

If a Halt or Clear signal is received in register 116, the MSB execution process is stopped by controls 133, and the registers are all reset in the case of a Clear command. In the case of Halt, the information remains in the registers and may be obtained through use of a SENSE CCW.

The micro-programs described in FIGUREs 4-9 are stored in the MSB local store 20B. The MSB execution unit 20C and its bus 100 are controlled by the micro-programs running on the MSB processor 20A.

If processor 20A sets a one into the HALT/Clear Register, then the execution control unit will terminate operation of the MSB execution unit after completion of the current page move.

Thus, the storage command is put in the Storage Reg 131 at cycle N+5, then the command is gated onto the MSB bus 100 in the embodiment for transmission to the ADM adapter 20D. The MSB execution unit then waits (some M cycles) for the ADM adapter 20D to send the command to the SCE 21, the page is moved by the SCE 21, after which the SCE 21 send a completion response to the ADM adapter 20D, which is then returned to the Execution Unit Control 133. At cycle M+1 the completion response is analyzed and the execution proceeds to move the next page if more pages remain to be moved.

Source DAT Operation By The ADM Co-Processor - Fig. 11A:

The ADM co-processor DAT circuits 104 cycle through the cycles of operation described below. The source DAT 104 receives source flags and information from registers 101-103, generates source STE and PTE addresses and accesses the source STE and PTE in MS for source virtual address translation, indicates the source storage medium type, and signals an "address valid" or an "exception", and, if valid, the translated source absolute address, source key, and memory type are loaded into storage registers 131 and will subsequently be sent to the SCE 21 as part of a page-move storage command to access the source page in a move operation for the respective source specification.

Gate DAT ADDR reg(PX) + STE reg(PTO) into PTA reg as the generated PTE address (as described in ESA/390 principles of operation and in European patent application number EP 90 115 517.6.

6

Gate PTA reg into FETCH reg

7

Gate FETCH Reg onto MSB BUS to access PTE in MS.

8

Gate PTE data from MS on MSB BUS into PTE REG

9

Gate PTE(PFRA) into ABS ADDR reg as the translated source real address (as described in ES/390 priciples of operation and in European patent application number EP 90 115 517. 6.
If PTE Flags=MS, then Gate MS into MT REG.
If PTE Flags=ES, then Gate ES into MT reg.
If PTE flag is invalid, indicate page fault exception and signal operation complete.

10

Gate Source Address Valid Signal to MSB Execution Unit Control Logic.

Sink DAT Operation By The MSB Co-Processor - Fig. 10 and Fig. 11B:

The MSB co-processor DAT circuits 109 cycle through the cycles of operation described below. The Sink DAT 109 receives sink flags and information from registers 106-108, generates sink STE and PTE addresses and accesses the sink STE and PTE in MS for sink virtual address translation, indicates the sink storage medium type, and signals an "address valid" or an "exception", and if valid sends the translated sink absolute address to storage register 131 is to form part of the page-move storage command which will be sent to the SCE subsequently to access the sink page in a move operation for the respective sink specification.

Claims (24)

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system, comprising:
at least one central processor (CP), a system memory (23, MS), and an input/output (I/O) system;
CP execution means for executing a data move instruction for generating a work element for an asynchronous co-processor and executing other instructions thereafter;
co-processor means (20) for obtaining a work element to initiate a co-processor program containing an address to a move specification block (MSB), the MSB having a source specification for specifying a source location from which one or more page(s) is to be moved and a sink specification for specifying a sink location into which the source page is to be moved; and
means in the co-processor for controlling the moving of the one or more page(s) of data from the source location to the sink location, and the CP being capable of executing other instructions during the moving of the one or more pages by the co-processor (20).

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
the system memory comprised of more than one medium, each with separate addressability; and
MSB initialization means (20c) for specifying a source medium and a sink medium in the MSB and locations in the media for the source page(s) and the sink page(s).

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
MSB initialization means (20c) for allowing virtual addressing to specify the location of the page(s) in at least one of the media.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
means (20c) in the co-processor for interpreting a flag field in the MSB for selecting the medium for the location of each source and sink page.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
MSB initialization means (20c) for specifying a real address or a virtual address in the MSB for each source and sink page.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
means (20c) in the co-processor for interpreting a flag field in the MSB for indicating a number of times for the page(s) in the source location to be replicated in the sink location.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
the source medium and the sink medium being the same medium.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system as defined in claim 1, further comprising:
the source medium and the sink medium being different media.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system having at least one central processor and a system memory, comprising:
processor execution means for executing a data move instruction for generating a work element on a work queue (WQ) and signalling a co-processor (20) of the existence of the work element on the work queue (WQ);
asynchronous co-processor means (20) having a control program initiated by the signalling processor to access the work queue (WQ) to obtain a work element for locating a co-processor page transfer program having at least one move specification block (MSB), the MSB having a source specification for locating a source page to be transferred and having a sink specification for locating a sink page into which the source page is to be transferred and a count of pages to be moved, and the MSB having a flag field for controlling characteristics of the page transfer; and
means (20c) in the co-processor for translating any virtual address contained by the MSB into an address having a direct addressing relationship to the location in a system memory of requested source and sink addresses.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 9, further comprising:
the flag field having indicators for specifying a first medium and/or a second medium for the source and sink locations.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 9, further comprising:
main storage (23, MS) being specified as a first medium and expanded storage (24, ES) being specified as a second medium by the flag field.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 9, further comprising:
the flag field having indicators for specifying whether the source or sink location contains a real address or a virtual address.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 12, further comprising:
a field in each MSB specification for designating a virtual address space containing an associated source or sink location.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 12, further comprising:
a segment table descriptor (STD) field in each MSB specification for designating a virtual address space containing an associated source or sink location.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 12, further comprising:
the MSB containing an address of a translation table for translating a virtual address contained in the MSB source and/or sink specification.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 9, further comprising:
a data mover instruction for asynchronously controlling a co-processor (20) to access a work queue (WQ) to obtain an address to a co-processor program containing one or more MSBs for locating pages of data to be transferred.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 12, further comprising:
a page table entry (PTE) field for a virtually-addressed source or sink page which indicates the media in which the operand is stored and to which the address in the page table entry (PTE) applies.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 17, further comprising:
a flag field in each MSB for indicating whether a page at a sink address is to be over-written with a padding character without transferring any page from a source location.

Asynchronous data mover means in a data processing system having at least one central processor and a system memory, comprising:
processor execution means for executing a data move instruction for generating a work element on a work queue (WQ) and signalling a co-processor (20) of the existence of the work element on the work queue (WQ);
asynchronous co-processor means (20) having a control program initiated by the signalling processor to access the work queue (WQ) to obtain a work element for locating a co-processor page transfer program having at least one move specification block (MSB), the MSB having a source specification for locating a source page to be transferred and a count of pages to be moved, and having a sink specification for locating a sink page into which the source page is to be transferred, and the MSB having a flag field for controlling characteristics of the page transfer; and
the co-processor page transfer program containing at least one channel control word (CCW) for locating an MSB to control the transfer of one or more pages of data in the system located at virtual or real addressed locations in the system.

Asynchronous data mover means as defined in claim 19, further comprising:
a flag field in the source specification area and in the sink specification area of the MSB for indicating whether the addresses in the respective areas are in main storage (23, MS) or in expanded storage (24, ES) in the system.

An asynchronous data mover method for a data processing system, comprising:
providing at least one central processor (CP), a system memory (23, MS), and an input/output (I/O) system in the data processing system;
executing by the CP of an asynchronous data move instruction in a CP program to generate a work element on a work queue (WQ), the CP being available for executing other instructions after providing information for putting the work element on the work queue (WQ);
signalling by the CP to a co-processor (20) that an element is being added to the work queue (WQ);
performing by the co-processor (20) of a page move operation for each queue element accessed by the co-processor from the work queue (WQ);
signalling by the co-processor (20) of the CP's upon the completion or termination of each request;
putting the co-processor into a wait state when no further work element is found in the work queue (WQ);
taking the co-processor (20) out of wait state when a signal is received from a CP that a work element is being put on the work queue (WQ);
initiating a co-processor program having channel control words (CCWs), some CCWs containing an address to at least one move specification block (MSB), each MSB specifying a source location in the system for a page to be transferred and a sink location into which the source page is to be transferred for controlling the movement of one or more pages when one or more work elements are on the work queue (WQ);
controlling memory fetches and memory stores by at least one memory controller in response to page fetch and store commands by the co-processor (20) to the memory controller;
signalling the CP's when a page transfer program has been completed under control of the co-processor (20) to communicate completion to the CP program for which the page transfer(s) were made;
responding to another CCW type requesting information of the current state of the present or last operation by providing the content of internal co-processor registers containing addresses, counts, and error indications; and
responding to another CCW type requesting information as to the co-processor type, model and capabilities.

An asynchronous data mover method for a data processing system as defined in claim 21, the co-processor program further comprising:
fetching a next CCW in the co-processor program when an MSB located through a last CCW in the program indicates it is the last MSB in an MSB list (32).

An asynchronous data mover method for a data processing system as defined in claim 22, the co-processor program further comprising:
sensing an off state for a chaining field in the MSB for indicating the MSB is the last MSB in a current MSB list (32).

An asynchronous data mover method for a data processing system as defined in claim 23, the co-processor program further comprising:
sensing an off state for a chaining field in a current CCW for indicating the CCW is the last CCW in the current co-processor program, and incrementing or transferring an address in the CCW for accessing the next CCW in the co-processor program.